Comments

Wow, interesting article. While the writer clearly had little to no knowledge of sports cards, they did their research and offered an interesting and seemingly (to me) unbiased overview of the situation. Thanks for the link.

@erikthredd said:
So "mistakes in the grading process" led to borders being trimmed,stains disappearing and color added to spots that needed it? Yeah I call BS on that one,Mr Moser.

“Yeah I did it, but they should have caught it! So they’re at fault!”

So if I go 100 mph in a 35, no cop sees me or pulls me over, and then I hit and kill somebody, is the police Dept at fault? Yeah, I did it, I broke the law, but the fault falls with those who didn’t catch my illegal activity before I did harm.

@erikthredd said:
So "mistakes in the grading process" led to borders being trimmed,stains disappearing and color added to spots that needed it? Yeah I call BS on that one,Mr Moser.

“Yeah I did it, but they should have caught it! So they’re at fault!”

So if I go 100 mph in a 35, no cop sees me or pulls me over, and then I hit and kill somebody, is the police Dept at fault? Yeah, I did it, I broke the law, but the fault falls with those who didn’t catch my illegal activity before I did harm.

I think what he is doing is making his legal argument that there is nothing illegal about sending PSA altered cards.

***Jimmy, I didn't care for the way that train of thought was heading, so I deleted part of your statement. I am not saying that you were intentionally trying to start anything, but it just threw too many ideas out there that have no basis at all in fact. - Todd Tobias

Thanks @lamontcarter for posting the article. Very interesting Moser denies any alterations and claims he looked for cards that were undergraded and just submitted them for re-evaluation. I can see that happening once, maybe twice -- but the amount of times his submissions got a bump in grade is really hard to believe...

@DotStore said:
Thanks @lamontcarter for posting the article. Very interesting Moser denies any alterations and claims he looked for cards that were undergraded and just submitted them for re-evaluation. I can see that happening once, maybe twice -- but the amount of times his submissions got a bump in grade is really hard to believe...

The grade bumps are the secondary outcome. There is verifiable proof showing the alterations he did to the cards to achieve the grade bumps.